Repository:
Stanford University. Libraries. Dept. of Special Collections and University Archives.

Language:
English.

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Active throughout her life in union activities, Anne Draper achieved prominence in the 1960s as a California leader of various
labor, feminist and peace movements. The Delano Grape Strike (1965-1967) gave her the opportunity to demonstrate her support
for the farm workers organizing in the San Joaquin Valley. In December, 1965, Draper organized the first Food Caravan to Delano,
and by January, 1966, she chaired the San Francisco Labor Council Delano Striker's Aid Committee. In the late 1960s, Draper
joined in the broader critique of American society espoused by radical political movements. By then an avowed "revolutionary
Marxist and Independent Socialist," she founded the Labor Assembly for Peace, a trade unionist group opposed to the Vietnam
War, and Union W.A.G.E. (Women's Alliance to Gain Equity), a militant women's rights group. Despite the acclaim she received
--Cesar Chavez called her "an example of what a true unionist should be" --Draper never gained national recognition. This
was in part due to her untimely death at age fifty-six in 1973, but it was also true that national leadership in union work
was not yet open to women. Anne Pauline Draper, nee Kracik, was born in New York City on March 4, 1917, to Polish and Ukrainian
parents. Unionism was a family tradition: in the early 1900s, her father was a volunteer organizer of New York window washers.
Draper spent part of her childhood in Westbury, Long Island, but in her teens she returned to New York City to attend Washington
Irving High School and Hunter College. She put herself through college, working four hours a night, six nights a week as a
sales clerk at Woolworth's, and she graduated from Hunter College in January, 1938, with a major in mathematics and economics.
She also studied languages, music and dance, and earned a prominent place on the debate team. Draper's first job was with
the Steel Worker's Organizing Committee in northern New Jersey as a secretary and organizer. In a 1958 letter to Carmen Lucia,
Vice-President of the United Hatters, Cap and Millinery Workers Union, Draper fondly remembered the late 1930s: "[It] was
almost a different social era and the best in the labor movement was coming to the top pushed by the militancy of the ranks."
(Box 1, folder 2) From 1938 to 1942, Draper attended graduate courses in business, finance and commercial law at the American
Institute of Banking, New York City, and studied school administration at Hunter College and English at New York University.
She financed her education by editorial, research and general secretarial work at the American Bankers' Association and also
helped to edit the American Institute of Banking Bulletin. During this time she was a member of the New York Local Office
Workers. Draper moved to San Pedro, California in 1942, where she worked at Todd Shipyards as a welder for the duration of
World War II and joined the Shipyard Workers Union. On November 3, 1945, Draper was arrested on charges of disturbing a meeting
held by Gerald L. K. Smith (the American Firster and populist), where mass picketing took place. Her case was tried in Los
Angeles Municipal Court, and the jury dismissed the charge. After the war, Draper became the Los Angeles local secretary,
organizer and delegate to the Los Angeles Council of the American Federation of Labor for the United Hatters, Cap and Millinery
Workers International union. She organized non-union shops, conducted strikes and negotiated contracts. In 1948, her success
brought her a position on the United Hatters International staff in New York City. There she became involved in education,
publicity and research, and began writing a weekly radio script entitled "Here Is Labor." From 1949 to 1958, Draper was organizer
and representative of the New York Joint Board of the Millinery Workers Union. During these years she was also active in the
New York Liberal Party, under the leadership of David Dubinsky and Alex Rose. In 1958, Draper's husband, Hal, a socialist
theorist and writer, developed health problems that required a milder climate. After
traveling in Europe, the couple moved to Oakland, California. The next two years were restless ones for Anne. While Hal became
a librarian at the University of California at Berkeley, Anne was unable to gain entry in what appeared to be a male-dominated
domain --west-coast union work. After almost two years of frustration, Draper became West Coast Union Labor Director for the
400,000-member Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America (ACWA), AFL-CIO. One of only four women in the country to serve as
a regional director, Draper retained this position until the end of her life. Reporters commented on her powerful platform
personality at union conventions, where she frequently spoke. She organized boycotts and union label publicity, involving
even California Governor Edmund G. (Pat) Brown, and Senator Hubert H. Humphrey in her campaigns. By the mid-1960s, as awareness
of women's issues grew, feature editors began to comment on Draper's activities, although they were always quick to stress
her feminine appearance and her effort to add the "woman's touch" by wearing union label dresses and hats (she was never photographed
without a hat). But ACWA Vice-President Louis Hollander recognized the importance of such union label work, stating in an
interview that the union label is linked to workers' political education and is a decisive factor in protecting hard-won union
wages and working conditions. Draper's work for the ACWA did not absorb all her time. Immediately upon her arrival in California
in 1958 she began doing publicity for the Socialist Party, using her national connections to build up its Berkeley branch
and becoming an executive board member of the same. Her interest in the farm labor movement was aroused soon thereafter, when
a short-term job as research economist with the California Federation of Labor alerted her to the harsh conditions faced by
agricultural workers, particularly women and minors. At a 1959 meeting of the California Industrial Welfare Commission, Draper
presented her findings. Draper lost no time in researching virtually every aspect of the farm workers' struggle. Her highly-organized
filing system contained data on wages, productivity, and farm labor conditions (see, for instance, Series IV). By 1960 she
was research director for the California Citizens Committee for Agricultural Labor. For the next decade she continued to testify
before the Industrial Welfare Commission. She spoke throughout the western United States on behalf of the Delano Grape Strike
and United Farm Worker boycotts. In Delano, Draper was known as "the favorite daughter of the Strike." Her constant encouragement
and organization of the Food Caravan had earned the admiration of Chavez and other migrant worker leaders. From 1964 to 1972
Draper prepared weekly radio commentaries for Berkeley radio station KPFA. She also published numerous articles for the labor
press and community newspapers. Together with her husband, Draper wrote a thirty-two page pamphlet entitled "The Dirt on California:
Agribusiness and the University" (Independent Socialist Clubs of America, 1968). By 1967, her activism had expanded to encompass
peace and feminist issues. In addition to helping to found the Labor Assembly for Peace and Union W.A.G.E., she continued
to lecture and write. With Herma Hill Kay, a law professor at U.C. Berkeley, she taught a class on women and the law at the
Wright Institute. Anne Draper died on March 25, 1973.

SCOPE AND CONTENT

The Anne Draper Papers reflect Draper's work as a trade union organizer, writer, and champion of the rights of farm workers.
The collection is divided into five series, the contents and arrangement of which are described below.